Laurie Stargell named chair of Department of Biochemistry and … – Colorado State University News (press release)

The Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology baton has been passed into the hands of Professor Laurie Stargell, who is ready to go full speed ahead as the new chair of that department in Colorado State Universitys College of Natural Sciences.

Laurie Stargell, professor and department chair, biochemistry and molecular biology

Stargell strives to continue her mentoring, to grow and strengthen her department ranks, and to develop new programs and ideas. But these are just the start to her plans as department chair. She said, I feel strongly that we should empower our people, whether they be faculty, staff or students, with the knowledge and skills they need to succeed.

Stargell earned her B.A. in biology at the University of Virginia in 1986. She then went on to become a pre-doctoral fellow at the University of Rochester, where she received her Ph.D. in biology. There, she began studying basic machinery for RNA polymerase II transcription. This led into her research with chromatin, histone variants, and transcription processes in the model organism Tetrahymena.

After completing her studies at Rochester, Stargell began her postdoctoral research in genetics at Harvard Medical School and finished in 1996. As a postdoctoral fellow, she became fascinated by the power and breadth of approaches available in the yeast system for understanding mechanisms of transcriptional regulation, which she continues to make headway on today.

Stargell has been a part of CSU for the past 20 years and is committed to mentoring and providing research opportunities for students at all levels. She started out as an assistant professor in 1996, and moved up to associate professor in 2002. She has been the associate chair for undergraduate studies since 2006 and is involved in creating curriculum, advising, and helping with the scholarship processes for the growing undergrad population in biochemistry and molecular biology.

In 2008, she became a full professor in the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology and continues to teach introduction to genetics, molecular genetics, a biochemistry seminar, and molecular biology. Thanks to her research and her ability to mentor at CSU, past students have reached career goals and now hold positions in academia and in the field.

She is also the chair of the board of directors for the Institute of Genome Architecture and Function. She has received honors from CSU such as the Jack E. Cermak Advising Award, CNS Professor Laureate, and Oliver P. Pennock Distinguished Service Award. She was also awarded, along with fellow CSU professor Jennifer Nyborg and former CSU professor Karolin Luger, a $7.8 million grant from the National Institutes of Health to study how chromosomes unravel to depict genes that dictate cell behavior.

Stargell also started an elementary outreach program along with fellow CSU Associate Professor Eric Ross, to get young students excited about science. Biochemistry is Elementary, is an eight-week-long program that has engaged over 600 fifth graders. It allows students to get hands on experience introducing genetics and biochemistry, while showing the value of studying model systems.

With a new chair being filled, the department looks ahead to keep research and advancement growing in the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology under new chair, Laurie Stargell.

The College of Natural Sciences extends its gratitude to Shing Ho who has been the departments chair for the last 10 years. As he returns to his faculty position, the department appreciates the progress he made during his time as chair. Biochemistry and molecular biology is now the fourth largest major in the college. And as of 2016, the entering class was 130, pushing majors to over 300 students. Whats more, its faculty continue to produce groundbreaking research.

Stargell sees her role as continuing this success. She said, Each member of our department, whether faculty, staff, or student, is important and essential, and together we are responsible for the overall health and welfare of the department.

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Laurie Stargell named chair of Department of Biochemistry and ... - Colorado State University News (press release)

La La Land: anatomy of a backlash – Den of Geek UK

Reader, you should have seen the queue: it stretched all the way out of the cinema, down the street, round the corner and on for another half a kilometre or so. This was the line for La La Land at the London Film Festival late last year, and there was a definite hum of enthusiasm in the air.

Hype had already built around the musical since its first screening at the Venice Film Festival a couple of months earlier, and as a result, there were so many people desperate to see the movie at its first London screening that the cinema couldn't accommodate them all. Your humble writer managed to grab one of the last seats in the house - and again, the atmosphere was electric: the audience laughed in all the right places, and as the final credits rolled on Damien Chazelle's airy romance, a ripple of applause went up.

You've probably noted all the critical acclaim by now, and seen the La La Land poster covered in a sea of stars from all those gushing notices. Yet over the past few weeks, the tide has begun to turn against Chazelle's musical. Hadley Freeman wrote an amusing piece about the film's jazz-snob leading man, played by Ryan Gosling.

A more serious criticism argues that La La Land's racially insensitive in its casting, given that it's all about a white guy defending jazz - a form of music created by African Americans. Other commentators have suggested that co-star Emma Stone's character is something of a blank; still others have said that, really, Gosling and Stone's singing and dancing isn't up to much.

Those are only a very brief example of the criticisms levelled at La La Land over the past few weeks - for more a more detailed top-down view, these pieces at the Guardian and the Washington Post will give you just about everything you need. The deeper question, at least for us, relates to the nature of the backlash itself. How can a fairly harmless indie film go from acclaim to fairly comprehensive criticism so quickly?

Based on our years of watching and reviewing movies, here's a theory of how the backlash process works...

Like so many indie flicks, La La Land made its debut at a film festival. On paper, being a critic at a film festival sounds like the best gig in the world: you get to sit around watching movies all day and get paid for it.

The reality, however, is a bit more stressful than it initially sounds. First, you're spending eleven-or-so days watching dozens of films back-to-back. While you might be familiar with some of the movies on offer at any given festival, the whole point of these events is to get an early look at work from up-and-coming directors or filmmakers from more obscure parts of the globe.

This means you could be up bright and early to see an Italian drama for breakfast, before tucking into a Dutch thriller for elevenses, a Japanese horror at lunchtime, a French animation for your mid-afternoon snack, an American biopic for dinner, and so on. The last film might end somewhere around midnight, and then you have to trudge back to your hotel room, a stack of barely-legible notes clutched in your fist, and attempt to write reviews from them all - assuming you can even remember what happened in that film you saw at breakfast. It was Swiss, wasn't it? Yes, probably Swiss.

Now, we're not suggesting for one moment that you should throw a pity party for film critics. Rather, the above might help explain why, when a film comes along that's different or unexpected, weary critics will suddenly jump out of their skins. A musical as light and frothy as La La Land must have felt like a sunny antidote to some of the more brooding works on offer at last year's Venice film festival. As a comparison, Dutch director Martin Koolhoven's Brimstone (which was also in the main competition at Venice) is an exploration of how many horrible things Guy Pearce can do to men, women and livestock in two-and-a-half hours - a Supermarket Sweep of taboo-busting atrocities.

So the festival critics love your movie, and the first wave of reviews are full of five-star verdicts. As the film filters out to other festivals, more critics and cinema lovers are enticed into going to see it after that initial burst of acclaim, and the positive word-of-mouth continues. Gradually, however, the dissenting voices begin to surface: in December last year, for example, critic Daniel Kimmel argued that La La Land is "a film that tries too hard and is always showing how much it's straining." That same month, the National Post's critic Calum Marsh suggested that Chazelle's technique as a director did much to mask his shortcomings as a dramatist.

Within a few short weeks, the cracks have begun to show.

There are certain kinds of movie that awards bodies absolutely love. Movies that celebrate the triumph of the human spirit; movies that showcase the craft of acting. Most of all, Hollywood awards bodies love movies about Hollywood. Like silent-era love letter The Artist, the British Academy, the Golden Globes and the Screen Actors Guild have clutched La La Land to their bosoms. The movie broke records at the Globes; at the Oscars, its 14 nominations puts it alongside All About Eve and Titanic for the most nods given to a single contender.

For most indie filmmakers, awards recognition is a gift from the gods: with a potential audience of millions, even a nomination or two can mean a movie with an otherwise tiny marketing budget can get some much-needed exposure. In the case of a movie like The Artist or La La Land, however, there's the possibility that a sense of suspicion might set in among cinema-goers. Is La La Land really worth all those gold statues, or is this just another example of Oscar voters falling for the hype?

Despite all the gushing reviews from critics and the nominations from awards bodies, it's this stage that's the true turning point. A film's release exposes a movie to the broader public for the first time, obviously, but something else also happens at the same moment: columnists, bloggers, journalists and pundits start filing their opinion pieces.

On the surface, an opinion piece and a review might seem like the same thing - a review is, after all, one person's opinion, albeit backed up by their years of experience and knowledge in one particular field of interest. But reviews are invariably written early, often after one viewing and frequently before a film's release. They're an impression, a snapshot based on an initial screening. This is why movies can sometimes receive a critical drubbing on their theatrical release, and then a more positive reassessment sometime later.

As a quick example, consider Mark Kermode and his change of heart over Steven Spielberg's 2001 film, A.I.: Artificial Intelligence. When the movie first came out, Kermode gave it a negative review; 12 years later, he'd had time to reflect, revisit the movie, and came to the conclusion that he was wrong - so wrong that he even apologised to Spielberg for his initial verdict.

Articles and opinion pieces, unlike reviews, generally come after a period of rumination; writers have had a chance to think about a movie's themes, ideas and flaws. They may have rewatched it a couple of times, talked about it with friends, and come to the conclusion that some of the flaws are more fundamental problems on closer inspection.

This is why, at least in this writer's humble opinion, a movie as seemingly beloved as La La Land can suddenly seem so hated a few weeks later. Reviews are an expression of surprise, a reflection of an initial warm glow left behind by a first viewing; those later pieces are where a film's wider implications are picked apart in more forensic detail.

So if La La Land received a legion five-star reviews on one hand, and criticism for its insensitivity on the other, which is right? The answer, we'd argue, can be both. For a multitude of reasons, La La Land struck a chord with critics when it first emerged last year - and we were among the various outlets who expressed our affection for it. But
this isn't to say that La La Land is a perfect movie, or that the flaws found within it mean that it doesn't deserve the praise it's already received.

One of the positive things about our interconnected, online world is that we can read and hear opinions from critics in other countries and from different walks of life. Female writers, like Hadley Freeman, have pointed out the less likeable side of La La Land's central male character, Sebastian, and noted the somewhat flat depiction of its other lead, Mia - both things that may have passed some male cinema-goers by.

Similarly, jazz fans have pointed out flaws in its depiction of their favourite music genre; lovers of classic musicals have argued that La La Land isn't quite in the same league as the films it's quoting; MTV's Ira Madison III writes that, "If you're gonna make a film about an artist staying true to the roots of jazz against all odds [...] you'd think the artist would be black."

Criticisms like these are important; films are made by ordinary, flawed people who are products of their upbringing and their own worldview, so it follows that what they make is also flawed. Singling films out and holding them up for praise is important for the industry as a whole; without it, small films like La La Land, Blue Ruin, It Follows, Lion or Moonlight wouldn't get the word-of-mouth they need. But whether you call them backlashes or critical dissections, the more in-depth discussions of a film's ideas and meaning - whether intended or otherwise - are just as important.

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La La Land: anatomy of a backlash - Den of Geek UK

Stem Cells Provide New Thyroid Therapies | Worldhealth.net Anti … – Anti Aging News

Posted on Feb. 10, 2017, 6 a.m. in Thyroid Hormone Stem Cell Stem Cell Research

Researchers have identified a way to engineer new thyroid cells from stem cells, which could lead to new thyroid disease treatments.

A recent report published in the medical journal Stem Cell Reports, sheds light on breakthrough research regarding the use of thyroid cells derived from stem cells for new therapies. Scientists at Boston University's School Medicine led the work. They have pinpointed a means of efficiently engineering thyroid cells by way of stem cells that will eventually help analyze and treat thyroid diseases.

Why the Thyroid is so Important

The thyroid is a gland positioned in the mid-section of the lower neck. When this gland does not function as designed, it wreaks all sorts of havoc on the body. Thyroid diseases occur when the gland is hyperactive and generates excessive hormones (hyperthyroidism) or generates too few hormones (hypothyroidism). Though the thyroid is fairly diminutive, it generates hormones that extend to tissues, cells and organs throughout the body to maintain a regulated metabolism. The metabolism is vitally important as it determines the rate at which the human body produces energy through oxygen and nutrients.

It is estimated that about 20 million individuals in the United States are plagued by a form of thyroid disease. A whopping 60 percent of these cases are never diagnosed. Unfortunately, thyroid disorders are life-long or chronic conditions that often prove quite challenging to manage. When thyroid diseases are undiagnosed, they can lead to particularly nasty health conditions ranging from osteoporosis to cardiovascular diseases and even infertility. Medical professionals are not completely certain as to what causes thyroid diseases.

Details About the Discovery

The breakthrough described above was discovered after studies were performed on mice. Stem cells are valued as they can mature into an array of different cell types. The researchers referenced above have determined how to transform the genetically modified stem cells from mice into thyroid cells. They determined there is a specific window during cell development to perform the transformation in an efficient manner. The group switched the Nkx2-1 gene off/on while guiding the lab-cultured stem cells through development stages. When the gene was on, most stem cells were transformed to thyroid cells in a small period of time.

What it Means for the Future

This discovery will likely allow for new research models and breakthrough treatments for thyroid diseases. It is anticipated that new thyroid cells for humans will eventually be engineered so medical professionals can better study and mitigate thyroid diseases. The principle might even apply to additional cell types to boot.

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Stem Cells Provide New Thyroid Therapies | Worldhealth.net Anti ... - Anti Aging News

To aid team chemistry, Loyola’s Julian DeGuzman becomes more inclusive – Chicago Tribune

After the Loyola boys basketball team started the season 5-5, the Ramblers' players received a writing assignment from the coaching staff.

"They had us write our thoughts about basketball and everything in general and about our season, how we were playing," said senior forward Julian DeGuzman, who lives in Chicago.

The responses were brought up in a discussion between players and coaches in a Florida hotel when the Ramblers were in Naples for December's Gulfshore Holiday Hoopfest.

DeGuzman said that he learned his tight bond with teammates Ramar Evans, Matt Lynch, Kris Lampley and Kai Khasu may not have been ideal for the Ramblers' team chemistry. DeGuzman said some teammates may have felt excluded by the friendship between him and a couple of the other seniors.

DeGuzman, Evans and Lynch, all starters, have been friends since elementary school when they met playing in a Rogers Park youth league. DeGuzman said that for the good of the team, it became time for the group to branch out a little more.

"Those guys are my childhood friends, so it was kind of natural for me to be around them," DeGuzman said. "But I realized I am with them a lot. Since then, I've been catching myself and maybe we'll split up at team dinners, and I'm just trying to be around other kids."

DeGuzman said other topics were discussed in the meeting, including the team playing too selfishly and too fast and teammates being able to critique one another without eliciting anger.

The exercise clearly proved to be productive because Loyola responded by reeling off 10 straight victories before it fell 46-37 to Fenwick on Jan. 31 in Wilmette.

DeGuzman's play on the court has been solid this season and also was a factor in the winning streak. He's averaging 8.3 points and 3.6 rebounds and at 6-foot-3, he has held his own in the post both offensively and defensively.

After the loss to Fenwick, which dropped the Ramblers to 6-2 in the Catholic League North, Loyola coach Tom Livatino praised DeGuzman's defensive effort against Fenwick's 6-5 forward Jamal Nixon, a four-year varsity player, who finished with 13 points and just two rebounds.

"(DeGuzman) has good feet. Nixon is a tough cover," Livatino said. "I thought Julian played him really well. That's big praise. The games we watched (of Fenwick), Nixon is a really good player. But so is Julian."

Livatino continued: "(Offensively) Julian is crafty, he has an assortment of moves, an ability to put it on the floor, score in the post and knock down the jump shot. He's having a really good year."

Livatino has told DeGuzman he is particularly hard to guard when he is more efficient with his post moves.

"Coach Livatino said sometimes I do too many spins and head fakes, and he's stressing getting the ball and going right into my move instead of all this extra stuff that I do," said DeGuzman, who said he is hoping to play college basketball and that Division III schools like Denison (Ohio), Lawrence (Wis.), Wabash (Ind.), Loras (Iowa) and Knox have shown interest.

In college, even at the Division III level, DeGuzman likely will have to play a little farther from the basket. But Lynch, who has been an AAU teammate of DeGuzman's with Fundamental U, said he believes DeGuzman will be able to make the adjustment.

"(DeGuzman) has a good shot, and I've noticed that over the past year in practice, he's improved and is capable of shooting the 3," said Lynch, who lives in Chicago. "He's got OK handles for a (post player). He's experienced playing that outside spot because (in AAU) we had someone bigger than him, and that pushed him out to the wing."

In memoriam

Before the Fenwick game, Loyola held a moment of silence for former boys basketball coach Jim O'Donnell, who died unexpectedly on Jan. 30 at the age of 76. O'Donnell coached the Ramblers from 1980-88 and won two regional titles. He was a longtime history teacher at the school and, even after his retirement from teaching, remained the public address announcer for Loyola football.

"He was a very, very good basketball coach, who had excellent teams," Livatino said. "He loved Loyola, loved the kids he coached. He was one of the best coaches we've had at Loyola. A tremendous loss. He was a great guy and it was a very sad day for our basketball program."

Dan Shalin is a freelance reporter for Pioneer Press.

Twitter @Pioneer_Press

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To aid team chemistry, Loyola's Julian DeGuzman becomes more inclusive - Chicago Tribune

By George! Grey’s Anatomy’s TR Knight Is Back in Shondaland Watch Him in Action on The Catch – PEOPLE.com

Former Greys Anatomy star T.R. Knight is back in Shondaland!

The actor, 43, has joined the cast of The Catch, which is executive-produced by Greys creator Shonda Rhimes, for season 2 and PEOPLE has the First Look at the actor in action on the ABC drama.

The Catch centers on private investigator Alice Vaughan (Mireille Enos), whose fianc Benjamin Jones (Peter Krause) conned her out of her money before sacrificing himself to save Alice from wrongful imprisonment.

Knight, who spent five seasons on Greys as George OMalley, joins the show as Alices brother.

Youre boyfriend is a conman? Knights character asks in the clip.

Fianc, thank you very much, Benjamin corrects him.

Whatever the status of their relationship, it appears things will get very Mr. & Mrs. Smith between Alice and Benjamin, who point guns at each other at the end of the promo.

Were not going to shoot each other, Benjamin says before giving his statement a second thought. Are we?

Season 2 of The Catch premieres March 9 at 10 p.m. ET on ABC.

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By George! Grey's Anatomy's TR Knight Is Back in Shondaland Watch Him in Action on The Catch - PEOPLE.com

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Synthroid Coupons - Synthroid Medication - Synthroid Vs Levothyroxine - 8409 Completed ORDERS Today! - Haitian Times

Germany Is Threatening Biohackers With Prison – Gizmodo

Over the last few years, advances in science have made the kind of experiments once only accessible to PhDs with fancy labs far more attainable. College undergrads are constructing gene drives. Anyone can buy a kit on the internet to concoct their own bioluminescent beer.

The German government, it seems, is none too pleased with this development. Two weeks ago its consumer protection office issued a statement making clear just how upset it is: Any science enthusiast doing genetic engineering outside of a licensed facility, it wrote, might face a fine of 50,000 or up to three years in prison.

The statement sent a wave of shock through the DIY bio community.

This is the first time Ive ever heard of a government calling out the DIY community specifically, said Todd Kuiken, a senior research scholar with the Genetic Engineering and Society Center at North Carolina State University.

The law behind the German DIY bio crackdown isnt new. The government was simply reminding so-called biohackers of a long-existing law that forbids genetic engineering experiments outside of laboratories supervised and licensed by the state.

But there is concern over how the pledge to enforce those rules may stymy the growth of the DIY science movement, and whether Germanys statement may inspire other European nations to take a similarly firm stance.

I am worried that the mentality could spread to other countries, said Josiah Zayner, who runs The Odin, a US company that sells DIY CRISPR kits.

Europe is generally much stricter in its regulation of genetic engineering and genetically modified products than the United States. In some countries, it is unclear whether DIY genetic engineering is legal at all.

A spokesperson for Germanys consumer protection office, the BVL, told Gizmodo that officials gathered in November to discuss concerns over the appearance of cheap DIY genetic engineering kits for sale on the internet, and decided it should issue a warning. Companies like The Odin and Amino Labs sell kits that make experimenting with DNA not much more difficult that whipping up a batch of brownies with a box of mix. Amino Labs compact, table-top bacteria lab is even sort of reminiscent of an Easybake oven, with its bright colors and playful name, the DNA Playground.

The statement has to be seen in light of the newly formed DIY biology scene and due to the appearance of low-priced DIY biology kits in online shops, the BVL told Gizmodo, via email.

At the moment, the BVL said it has not used the law to bring any criminal chargers against biohackers, though it may do so in the future.

Its difficult, but not impossible, for an individual in Germany to receive explicit government permission to do genetic engineering experiments outside of a lab. In Ireland, a PhD dropout named Cathal Garvey won such approval from the Irish government back in 2012.

Im pretty sure that laws will prohibit me from continuing my research at a later state, said Bruno Lederer, a German biohacker who hopes that loopholes in the law will allow his work to continue for now. I think its a shame that Id have to do illegal things in order to do independent research.

The BVL conceded that the new rules will make it virtually impossible for a lone scientist to meet the legal requirements to do genetic engineering. To begin with, any lab needs a project manager qualified by academic credentials such as a masters degree in science. Labs also require a commissioner for biological safety who is similarly qualified.

This makes genetic engineering experiments rather unattractive for individuals, the BVLs spokesman said.

Community biology labs, which often receive oversight and advisement from traditional scientists, shouldnt have an issue getting licensed. But not every DIY scientist lives near or has the resources to join a community lab. If the DIY bio movement is about making science accessible to those outside the Ivory Tower of academia, the German governments statement represents a serious roadblock.

If you are not living in a big city, access to a community biolab or an informal learning environment like a maker space is difficult, said Orkan Telhan, whose company, Biorealize, is in the process of developing its own DIY bio kits. There is no doubt that the field has to be regulated to mitigate adverse outcomes, but we need alternative ways to engage new audiences with biology.

In the US, biohackers operate in more of a regulatory gray areaoften regulations do not apply to them simply because no one ever conceived that self-taught scientists would one day pursue sophisticated biology experiments in their garages. But as the DIY community here has grown and sought to not just experiment at home, but sell its creations to the public, it, too, has increasingly faced regulatory run ins. In the US, DIY scientists are subject to the same rules as any other scientists. As in Germany, those regulations can be difficult to comply for an individual to comply with.

I dont think its entirely uncalled for to evaluate some of these spaces like community labs to make sure that they are operating in a safe manner, said Kuiken. I think that they are already operating safely, but currently there is no system in the US to determine that.

Germanys statement does offer one silver lining: it offers the rare clear guidance for what rules biohackers must comply with in order to go about their work legally.

Germany stating their position is a step forward in clarification, said Julie Legault of Amino Labs. Hopefully other countries will clarify their own rules as well.

The only question now is whether those rules will prevent biohackers from continuing with their work at all.

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Saudi Arabia funds new cancer biology professorship – GW Hatchet (subscription)

The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia is funding a new professorship in the School of Medicine and Health Science, according to a University release Wednesday.

Edward Seto, the associate director for basic sciences at the GW Cancer Center, was installed as King Fahd Professor of Cancer Biology Monday according to the release. It is unclear exactly how much Saudi Arabia contributed for the professorship.

Seto, who is also a professor of biochemistry and molecular medicine, studies cancer epigenetics and histone deacetylase enzymes, or HDACs, in order to treat cancer. Seto is working to turn off genes and transform cancer cells to normal cells, according to the release.

Im honored today to be given this opportunity to contribute, no matter how small, to the GW Cancer Center, the medical school, the university and to the educational ambitions and goals of the late King Fahd, Seto said in the release.

The newly installed professorship is named in honor of King Fahd bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, who was the countrys minister of education from 1954 to 1960 and ruled Saudi Arabia from 1982 until his death in 2005.

Abdullah Al-Saud, King Fahds grandson and Saudi Arabias ambassador to the United States, said in the release that his grandfather was committed to education and helped build Saudi Arabias national education system.

Im very happy to be here and very happy to be part of the celebration of something that somebody I knew was behind, Al-Saud said in the release.

Provost Forrest Maltzman said Saudi Arabia and GW began working on education together under the late King Fahd in the 1990s, according to the release.

GWs education school began partnering with a Saudi Arabian institution, Taibah University, for a doctoral program in educational leadership in 2015.

We are grateful for King Fahds vision and generosity, Maltzman said in the release. The King Fahd Professorship of Cancer Biology will enhance the ability of Dr. Seto and support the GW Cancer Centers research initiatives.

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Public policy with a true human face – World Bank Group (blog)

The other day I forgot my cellphone at home. On our way to her school my three-year old daughter asked me why I had forgotten it. I dont know, I was distracted I guess, I answered back, only to be faced with another why question from her. Of course, it didnt stop there. After the third why I really couldnt come up with anything sensible to say and, I confess, I wasnt finding the line of questioning amusing anymore. Yet, that very short exchange pretty much summed up the case for applying behavioral insights into public policy. How?

Chances are you have sometimes forgotten something unintentionally. We humans forget things from time to time and miss deadlines without meaning to do so. We really try to exercise, eat healthy, and lose weight but find it hard to do so. And if that salt shaker is at your restaurant table you are much more likely to add salt to your plate than if it is not. We tend to go with the flow and we often dont think hard enough about why we do the things we do. This is the reason we find the relentless why questions from a toddler so charming; were simply not used to questioning ourselves why we do certain things.

Even more telling, when asked we often dont even have a good intuition as to whats really behind many of our actions. This doesnt just apply to mundane tasks like carrying your cellphone around or adding salt to your plate. Ask yourself how did you get to support or disagree with the latest policy reform proposed by your government. Did you read the draft legislation from beginning to end to come up with your position or did you just rely on what someone else said about it, perhaps drawing on what the newspaper or politician you typically like said? Drawing on such shortcuts is not always wrong. In fact, they make perfect sense as a way of coping with the enormous complexity that surrounds us. Applying behavioral insights into public policy is nothing more than taking seriously these simple truths.

Nudging in Latin America The very good news is that the application of behavioral insights into public policy is happening already, in Latin America too. And one of the most encouraging lessons from the applications thus far is that small changes in public policy can have big impacts. In Peru, a simple but clever intervention by the Ministry of Education, in collaboration with the World Bank and others, aims to change childrens and teachers attitudes towards learning by emphasizing how being smart is something every student can work on. This draws on the growth mindset literature, which highlights that when students believe they can get smarter, they understand that effort makes them stronger. The intervention, which cost only 20 cents per student, resulted in an increase of student test scores of a sizeable magnitude.

This finding is particularly important for less privileged socioeconomic groups, which may have a greater tendency to view smartness as an unchangeable trait, as shown in a most comprehensive survey done in Chile. And many other interventions are being explored by MineduLab, the innovation lab of the Ministry of Education in Peru, to address education related challenges such as teacher absenteeism, teacher motivation, improving student performance, increasing parents engagement, and reducing drop-out rates.

The World Bank has partnered with authorities at all levels to implement projects on a variety of fields. In Guatemala and Costa Rica, jointly with the United Kingdoms Behavioral Insights Teamthe pioneer among government units to apply behavioral insights into public policythe effort achieved an increase in tax compliance through reaching out to taxpayers by letters and text messages. In Costa Rica we partnered with the municipality of Belen, as well as with the organization ideas42, and improved water conservation by informing households of how their water consumption compared to the average in their neighborhood.

Behavioral method: learn, test and adapt

An important contribution of behavioral insights into public policy is the method itself. It starts with a clear definition of what is the problem at hand, stated without any assumptions as to the drivers of the behavior in question. This is easier said than done as often we have entrenched preconceived ideas about what those drivers may be. It follows with a systematic series of why question, not unlike my three-year olds, that should guide some analysis and diagnosis of the behavior of the individuals involved. Finally, and key to the method, is the emphasis on an iterative process in which we set things up in a way to have fast and frequent feedback loops so that we can continually learn, test, and adapt.

Rigorous testing requires the type of administrative data that tax authorities or mandated scholastic achievement tests provide. This is needed to unequivocally establish the causal impact of interventions which are often deceptively simple and that often run counter the myth that big problems always require big solutions. At the same time, looking ahead, we may need to start considering how these behavioral insights can also inform public policy in areas that may be important but where we may not have as much data or opportunities for randomized interventions.

Despite those challenges the range of topics where behavioral insights are being applied keeps expanding. Ideas42, mentioned above, is exploring the application of behavioral science to improve case management for women affected by intimate partner violence in Bolivia. Technology can be a significant factor in expanding the scope of behaviorally-informed interventions. In Mexico, the Presidents Office is working with the UKs Behavioral Insights Team and Unicef, in a new two-way SMS system where both parties can send messages called Prospera Digitalone of the first of its kind in the worldto give expecting mothers a way to interact and influence the advice they receive, create personalize appointments, and plan for emergencies as well as the delivery.

Why not? Imagine if we could make this type of intervention more like the norm rather than the exception. Imagine if public policy recognized our very human weaknesses and that deliberately paused to ask why with the relentless of a toddler and the rigor of the scientific method. Imagine if doing so we could make public policy more effective.

As the World Bank, governments, and partners continue experimenting and applying behavioral science in government programs and policies, we will share with you through this series Small changes, big impacts: applying #behavioralscience into development every two weeks, the latest development and thinking in the region. Join us and share your thoughts, your work and thinking.

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Public policy with a true human face - World Bank Group (blog)

New ASU program combines law, psychology – Arizona State University

February 9, 2017

Sometimes during a trial a lawyer will get angry, a witness will speak out of turn or a defendant will have an outburst. The judge will then calmly instruct the jury to disregard what just happened.

In theory, its supposed to keep emotion and bias out of the legal system. In reality, ASU assistant professor Jessica Salerno said, its hard for humans to separate thoughts and emotions so neatly.

Jessica Salerno

So much of the legal system has to do with people making decisions, and people judging other peoples behaviors, she said. Its inherently psychological. Trying to make a legal system run well would be difficult without understanding what affects peoples decisions.

The recently established Program on Law and Behavioral Science takes that into account. It brings ASU experts such as Salerno together across disciplinesThe Program on Law and Behavioral Sciences has affiliated faculty from the School of Social and Behavioral Sciences, the Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law, the Department of Psychology, the School of Criminology and Criminal Justice and the School of Social Work. that meet at the intersection of law and behavioral science including psychology, law, forensics and criminology to conduct research and teach students in new ways that they hope will improve the legal system by making it more analytical and fair.

Associate professor and program co-founder Nick Schweitzer said research into law and psychology has grown in recent years, with scholars the world over realizing the importance of understanding how the fields intersect and influence each other in the legal process.

For example, psychologists might assist the court in understanding a criminal's mental state or determine whether a jury might be biased against a defendant based on race. The field has also helped reshape how police conduct eyewitness lineups and interviews.

Schweitzers own work has been cited by the U.S. Federal Courts to demonstrate how jurors weigh expert evidence in trials. And the work of one of the programs affiliated faculty members, Regents Professor Michael Saks, was instrumental in a U.S. Supreme Court decision regarding the psychological effects of smaller vs. larger juries.

Nick Schweitzer

At ASU, the Program on Law and Behavioral Sciences provides both an opportunity for cross-disciplinary research among scholars, as well as new academic offeringsthat include undergraduate and masters degrees in forensic psychology and a doctorate in law and psychology. Classes for the new program will begin in fall 2017.

According to Schweitzer, both the quality of the faculty and the emphasis on interdisciplinary collaboration at ASU stand to make the program one of the strongest ... both in terms of size and caliber of people.

This year, Salerno, anaffiliated faculty member, was awarded the Saleem Shah Early Career AwardThe Saleem A. Shah Early Career Development Award is given for demonstration of significant early career achievement in forensic psychology, or related fields of law. Forensic psychology combines general training in psychology with specialized course work in criminal law, criminal behavior, the diagnosis and treatment of mental disorders and legal decision-making. for her research into the role of emotion in the legal decision-making process.

Some of Salernos recent work has looked at how gruesome crime-scene photos and victim impact statements affect jurors. Shell be teaching a legal psychology course this fall but is equally excited at the prospect of strengthening research efforts by reaching across traditional fields of study.

The potential for this kind of collaboration is one of reasons I came to ASU, she said.

Last years winner of the Saleem Shah Early Career Award also hails from ASU. Assistant professor and fellow program faculty affiliate Tess Neal received the award for her research into expert bias in legal testimony.

Michael Saks

Thats the highest distinction you can get in our field for early career awards, Schweitzer said, adding that Saks recently received the Award for Distinguished Contribution to Psychology and Law, the highest distinction in the field at the opposite end of the career spectrum.

An ASU alum, Schweitzers work focuses on how neuroscience is used in court, in cases where brain scans that may reveal a psychological disorder are used as evidence. Hes thrilled to now be able to continue working with Saks.

Saks, who has been researching medical malpractice, is similarly enthused at the prospects of the new program.

Psychology has come to play an important role in the making of better law, policy and practices, he said. It has combined with forensic science to be part of ongoing reforms of that field, with economics to create behavioral economics, and will play an essential part in the movement to reduce injuries and deaths in health care.

The students and faculty in this new program will learn, teach and do research in these and numerous other areas where interdisciplinary innovation involving behavioral science is needed.

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AIVITA Biomedical to Present Skin Care Technology and Products at 15th Annual South Beach Symposium – PR Newswire (press release)

IRVINE, Calif., Feb. 7, 2017 /PRNewswire/ --AIVITA Biomedical today announced it will present details of its patented skin care technology and commercial line of skin care products at the upcoming South Beach Symposium in Miami Beach, Florida. The conference, taking place February 9-12 at the Loews Hotel Miami Beach, will be attended by physicians and practitioners seeking the latest therapies, technologies and procedures in medical and aesthetic skin care.

The South Beach Symposium is a 4-day conference which offers multiple educational tracks allowing medical professionals from both clinical and aesthetic dermatology practices to participate in focused education. AIVITA's Chief Executive Officer, Hans S. Keirstead, Ph.D., will meet with key opinion leaders to discuss AIVITA's new product lines. AIVITA's Chief Science Officer, Gabriel Nistor, M.D., will lead a Continuing Medical Education course in Thursday's session "Anti-Aging Medicine for the Dermatologist." Dr. Nistor's course, titled Stem Cells and Growth Factors in Skin Rejuvenation, will detail advancements in the understanding and application of human stem cell-derived growth factors for skin rejuvenation. On Friday, AIVITA Biomedical Scientific Advisory Board member Dr. Zoe Draelos, M.D. will chair a special symposium, "The Science of Topical Therapy, RX, OTC and Cosmeceuticals," in which she will present research she conducted on AIVITA's skin care advancements. The company will also have a scientific poster on display highlighting the findings of a clinical study which demonstrated improvements in several key areas of visible skin aging using the company's proprietary formulation.

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Lab fire shuts down Chemistry building | The Michigan Daily – The Michigan Daily

The University of Michigan Chemistry building was evacuated and closed due to a lab fire at approximately 9:30 a.m. Wednesday morning.

DPSS spokesperson Diane Brown said the incident, caused by an inflamed drum container, is still under investigation.

Were investigating what caused the fire, but shortly after the fire department arrived they were able to quickly extinguish the fire, Brown said. It had not spread, so there was no other damage other than to the container in which the fire occurred.

Brown said no injuries had been reported.

DPSS initial Twitter bulletin, which stated that the fire department was on scene and the surrounding streets had been closed, was followed by a series of three updates. The first follow-up tweet reported the fire was clear and the building and surrounding streets were reopened at 10:19 a.m. However two following tweets established the Chemistry building had not been approved for re-occupancy until 10:37 a.m. As of 12 p.m. Wednesday, classes have resumed inside the building.

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Lab fire shuts down Chemistry building | The Michigan Daily - The Michigan Daily

Tracing the chemistry of household dust – Chemical & Engineering News (subscription)

[+]Enlarge

House dust gathers toxic chemicals and is a source of exposure to these compounds.

Credit: Shutterstock

As sure as the sun rises, houses collect dust. It gathers on our knickknacks and dirties the carpets. More than just dirt, house dust is a mix of sloughed-off skin cells, hair, clothing fibers, bacteria, dust mites, bits of dead bugs, soil particles, pollen, and microscopic specks of plastic. Its our detritus and, it turns out, has a lot to reveal about our lifestyle.

For one thing, dust is far from inert. Those shed hairs and old skin cells can soak up a constellation of contaminants originating from consumer products that we bring into our homes. Other environmental contaminants can be tracked indoors on the soles of our shoes. So in addition to fluffy hair and garden dirt, dust can hold a witchs brew of persistent organic pollutants, metals, endocrine disruptors, and more.

Not only does dust hold a long memory of the contaminants introduced to a house, but its also a continual source of exposure for the residents. Dust gets resuspended when its disturbed and will recirculate throughout the house, picking up substances before returning once more to the floor. Year over year, dust accumulates in the home, says Miriam L. Diamond, an environmental chemist at the University of Toronto. Even after regular cleaning, it still accretes because homes are tightly sealed environments, and the dust gets entrenched in carpets and crevices. Dust from an old house may retain legacy pollutants such as DDT that were banned almost half a century ago, she says.

Scientists study dust to try to get a handle on both of these roles: as a proxy to better understand what chemicals are in our surroundings and how they move, and as a way to characterize what exactly we are exposed to via dust. The relationship between dust and human health remains uncertain. Researchers know that dust is an important source of exposure to certain pollutantsespecially for infants and toddlers, who spend 90% of their time indoors, put almost anything in their mouths, and are more sensitive than adults to many of the compounds found in dust. But they havent nailed down the extent of health risks from dust exposure nor which compounds and sources are of greatest concern. And many compounds remain unknown. The few to a hundred compounds that we know are in dust dont encompass the universe of chemicals in commerce, which number in the tens of thousands to over a million, says P. Lee Ferguson, an environmental chemist at Duke University. To reveal the full spectrum of chemicals in dust, researchers are turning to high-powered analytical tools. Dust is no longer something to sweep under the rug.

Scientists first realized that dust had a story to tell about environmental health in the 1940s when they measured human pathogens stuck to the dust in operating rooms to monitor cleanliness. In the 1970s, researchers began assessing house dust for lead from paint and gasoline as a way to determine the levels children might be exposed to. And in more recent studies, researchers have found carcinogenic compounds such as now-banned polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), once used in electrical cables and wood floor finishes, and endocrine disruptors such as phthalates, which soften vinyl flooring and other plastics.

Researchers are still building their understanding of the complex ways that volatile and semivolatile compounds interact in our surroundings, sorbing onto and desorbing from surfaces. They know that consumer productsvinyl flooring, personal care products, electronics, furniture, carpet pads, paints, cleaning products, and morehave a strong driving force to shed compounds into materials with lower concentrations of the substances. For example, a flame retardant might volatilize off the plastic parts of a TV set into the air, stick onto airborne particles, and move into dust, which settles on floors and carpets. The compounds will continue to migrate until they reach equilibrium with the surroundings, says Diamond. And heating the product, such as turning on a computer, also speeds migration into the home environment; a compound will condense in a cooler part of the room, where dust often resides.

High-molecular-weight compounds, such as the flame-retardant decabromodiphenyl ether, dont volatilize but instead enter dust when people physically knock fibers or minute bits of plastic off couches or computer cases. Another mechanism that we stumbled on is direct transfer or diffusion into dust, says Stuart Harrad, an environmental chemist at the University of Birmingham. For instance, if dust settles onto a TV set or Wi-Fi router, there is a very good chance that flame retardants will migrate directly into the dust.

With people in the room, things get even more complicated. Just like the Peanuts comic strip character Pig-Pen, people walk around in a dust cloud all day, says Heather M. Stapleton, an environmental chemist at Duke University. People add to the dusts organic load as their warm bodies volatilize deodorant or fragrance compounds from personal care products. Our skin cells and clothing fibers may also accumulate chemicals from the air before they are then shed to dust, where they can accumulate yet more chemical, Diamond says. Those compounds can be absorbed through skin, inhaled, or ingested when people put dusty hands to their mouths, complicating the scientists task of determining which exposure route is most important.

Most research has focused on identifying individual classes of compounds in dust, like the polybrominated diphenyl ether (PBDE) flame retardants found in furniture foam, carpet pads, and electronics; phthalates such as those found in vinyl flooring; or pesticides tracked in on shoes or evaporated off pet collars. Now, researchers are trying to get a more comprehensive view of the mixtures people are exposed to by probing the overall contaminant load in house dust. By combining toxicity tests with emerging methods for determining a complete profile of compounds in dust, researchers may be able to determine what chemicals or combinations of chemicals are most toxic, Stapleton says.

In one new approach, scientists combed through two dozen dust studies of 45 compounds to create a snapshot of nationwide exposures, says Robin E. Dodson, an exposure scientist at the Silent Spring Institute. She and Veena Singla, a staff scientist at the Natural Resources Defense Council, ranked the substances according to the amount in dust and estimated intake and health hazard. The phthalate plasticizer di(2-ethylhexyl) phthalate, known as DEHP, topped the list. Phthalate plasticizers make plastic more pliable and are found in vinyl flooring, food containers, and cosmetics. DEHP can disrupt hormone function in human and animal studies and is linked to reduced sperm motility in men. Other compounds on the list include phenol preservatives found in deodorants and cosmetics; flame retardants; a fragrance compound known as Galaxolide, or HHCB; and perfluorinated stain repellents (Env. Sci. Technol. 2016, DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.6b02023).

What all this means for health is a sticky question. For some compounds, such as PBDEs, researchers have shown that dust is a major source of human exposure to these potentially endocrine-disrupting chemicals. But for other compounds, dusts contribution is less certain. So for now, researchers still dont have a clear picture of house dusts risk to health. Many of the contaminants identified so far in dust are associated with hormone disruption, cancer, and reproductive damage, according to human epidemiological and cell studies, but for many of these compounds, governments have not set safe levels, Singla says. After she and Dodson completed their study, she compared the amounts of contaminants in dust to soil-screening thresholds set by the Environmental Protection Agency that indicate a chemical might pose health risks and thus require further investigation. She found that the concentrations of some pht
halates and flame retardants in house dust exceeded these standards.

Meanwhile, Stapletons work hints that exposure to contaminants in dust could be implicated in weight gain. Her lab found that flame retardants will bind to a human cell receptor that triggers fat storage in human cells. When testing human cells in the lab with extracts of dust at levels that a child might be exposed to, the scientists observe activation of these receptors about 50% of the time, suggesting the dust extracts may increase weight gain (Env. Sci. Technol. 2015, DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.5b01524).

Todd P. Whitehead, an environmental scientist at the University of California, Berkeley, is part of the California Childhood Leukemia Study that aims to identify the risk factors for the disease, which has become more common since 1975. He and his team are sampling dust in California homes because his work shows that dust is a useful indicator of exposure to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), PBDEs, and PCBs, compounds that are suspected leukemia risk factors. Compared to homes of healthy control children, the homes of children diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukemia tended to have, on average, higher levels of PAHs, PBDEs, and PCBs in dust after adjusting for other relevant factors such as household income, he says.

This is the strongest type of evidence to suggest that these compounds are risk factors for childhood leukemia, Whitehead says. But researchers cant say if the dust accounts for the increased leukemia risk, or if dust is correlated with the presence of something else in the home. And there are other sources of exposure to these compounds whose importance relative to dust is unknown. We know that dust exposes us to these chemicals, but at the same time, if someone eats smoked salmon or a grilled burger, there are potentially carcinogenic PAHs on those items, Stapleton says.

Nontargeted analysis has revealed that chlorinated paraffins (representative compounds in blue), nonylphenol ethoxylates (green), and azo dyes, many built using 2-bromo-4,6-dinitroaniline (red) as a backbone, are major components of household dust.

Credit: National Resources Defense Council

Until now, technology has constrained scientists to study just the few hundred compounds that they know are in dust and for which they have analytical standards. Furthermore, these compounds account for only a small fraction of the toxicity found in tests of household dust. So scientists reason that a substantial number of unknown contaminants in dust exist that could pose health risks.

In the past five years, a new strategy called nontargeted analysis has caught on that promises to uncover the complete swath of compounds we encounter in daily life, says Dukes Ferguson. The strategy combines high-resolution mass spectrometry with data processing tools to tease out the identities of chemicals from a mass of data.

Nontargeted analysis has revealed that chlorinated paraffins, nonylphenol ethoxylates, and azo dyes, many built using 2-bromo-4,6-dinitroaniline as a backbone, are major components of household dust.

Ferguson and his team recently took extracts of household dust, separated the extracts into fractions using high-performance liquid chromatography, and then analyzed each fraction with ultra-high-resolution mass spectrometry. This process generates up to 10,000 candidate molecules, Ferguson says. The teams software interrogates chemical databases such as PubChem, comes back with a list of potential matches, and then predicts their hypothetical mass spectra. Using those data, patent information, and literature references, the researchers prioritize the likelihood of compounds to be in dust samples.

Testing dust with this approach, Fergusons team found some of the usual suspects, such as flame retardants. But we also saw compounds we dont usually think of as organic contaminants in dust, such as nonylphenol ethoxylates, he says. These are nonionic surfactants used in household cleanersand suspected endocrine disruptors. Because most cleaning products get washed down the drain to sewage plants and discharged with treated effluent, scientists have been tracking surfactants in lakes and rivers but havent looked for them in dust, he says. Fergusons lab has shown that nonylphenol ethoxylates cause the proliferation of fat cells in a laboratory assay, hinting at a role in obesity. These surfactants give the highest analytical signal compared to all the other components, such as flame retardants, that we measure in house dust using mass spectrometry, he says.

Fergusons analysis also uncovered dog and cat flea treatments, fungicides, components of foods including pepper, and even cocaine. The team is working to get standards for these compounds to confirm their identity and quantify them in dust, he says. This work has the potential to open up our understanding of exposure far beyond the limited set of compounds weve typically studied to date, he concludes.

Its beginning to do so already. In addition to Fergusons work, researchers at the University of Saskatchewan recently used nontargeted analysis to identify azo dyes as the largest class of brominated compounds in house dust. And Cynthia A. de Wit, an environmental chemist at Stockholm University, and her team can now identify groups of chlorinated paraffins in unknown mixtures with the strategy. This large class of compounds acts as flame retardants, plasticizers, and lubricants for metal parts, appearing in caulking for buildings and windows and even in handheld kitchen mixers. There are thousands of isomers, and conventional mass spectrometry cant separate them, de Wit says.

She and her colleagues ranked concentrations of flame retardants in dust from five countries and found that chlorinated paraffins topped the list at 700 g/g dust, more than 200 times the level of halogenated flame retardants. The finding is alarming, de Wit says. Chlorinated paraffins have been known as contaminants for several decades, but lack of analytical methods has hindered determining them in environmental samples, she says.

These new findings are just the start, researchers say. In fact, an international collaboration aims to pick apart dust to get its complete profile, says Pawel Rostkowski, an environmental chemist at the Norwegian Institute for Air Research. Members of the team (called the NORMAN Network), from the European Union, U.S., Canada, Australia, and Japan have each received part of a pooled dust sample from Canadian homes to analyze with nontargeted methods. They will aggregate the results to build an open access library of mass spectra for the thousands of compounds they hope to identify.

The good news is that when we take action to phase out or ban chemicals of concern, the levels in our bodies go down, NRDCs Singla says. She points to PBDE declines in blood and breast milk after PBDE flame retardants began to be phased out more than 10 years ago. Research from Stapletons lab and others has shown that frequent hand washing, using a vacuum with a high-efficiency particulate air (HEPA) filter to capture the smallest particles, and dusting with a damp cloth will reduce personal exposure to chemicals lurking in dust. Wood floors, which can be easily cleaned with a damp mop, are preferable to carpets, since normal vacuuming only removes about 10% of the dirt entrenched in carpet fibers and pads (Rev. Environ. Contam. Toxicol. 2009, DOI: 10.1007/978-1-4419-0032-6_1).

A new California law requires all labels on upholstered furniture to declare the presence or absence of added flame retardants. We can start thinking about moving more upstream by selecting products without these chemicals and working with manufacturers to remove these compounds from their products, SSIs Dodson says. But she adds that ultimately, safety testing needs to be done before, not after, compounds are added to productsbefore they even have the chance to turn into dust.

Janet Pelley is a freelance writer. A version of this story first appeared
in ACS Central Science: http://cenm.ag/housedust.

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Why Cellect Biotechnology Ltd Shares Skyrocketed Higher Today – Fox Business

What happened

Cellect Biotechnology (NASDAQ: APOP) stock is up nearly 30% at 12:06 p.m. EST after the company announced that it treated the first patient in the biotech's phase 1/2 trial, dubbed ApoGraft01, testing its stem cell technology ApoGraft in patients with blood cancer.

Treating the first patient shouldn't have come as much of a surprise to investors. In November, the company said the Israeli Ministry of Health had given its approval to begin the trial. Perhaps investors are just really happy that the trial is finally starting. Also keep in mind that Cellect Biotechnology has a fairly low market cap, so the relative increase in valuation wasn't that much.

Image source: Getty Images.

Cellect Biotechnology's ApoGraft attempts to better select stem cells to help prevent graft-versus-host disease (GvHD), which occurs in 25% to 50% of recipients of allogeneic stem cell transplantation. GvHD happens when the donated stem cells produce immune cells that start mistakenly attacking the patients' normal cells because they see it as foreign. GvHD leads to 15% of the deaths that occur after allogeneic stem cell transplantation.

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ApoGraft01 will enroll 12 patients, so it shouldn't take too long for Cellect Biotechnology to fully enroll the trial. Before data from that trial reads out, investors will get results from a trial testing ApoGraft in healthy volunteers by the end of the first quarter.

While Cellect Biotechnology is progressing, investors should proceed with caution given the biotech's precarious capital situation. At the end of September, Cellect Biotechnology had just $9.4 million in cash and cash equivalents on the books. The company may be able to raise additional capital, but most biotechs raise capital through secondary offerings, diluting shareholders' equity in the process.

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The Woman Behind a Secret Grey’s Anatomy Experiment – WNYC

In 2006, editors from Newsweek magazine picked this picture for the front of an issue on the 25th anniversary of AIDS. The woman, Jennifer Jako, was HIV positive and 6 months pregnant. (Ethan Hill ) Feb 8, 2017 by Kenny Malone

About nine years ago, 17.5 million people tuned into an episode of Greys Anatomy that, on the surface, appeared like any other high-stakes surgery, high-drama love triangles. What those millions of Greys viewers didnt know was that they were guinea pigs for a massive, secret experiment.

That experiment was arguably a referendum about a single woman: Jennifer Jako, and her decision to become a mother.

In 1991, at the age of 18, Jako had a one night stand with a high-school friend. It was the only time shed ever had sex without a condom. She contracted HIV and spent years trying to debunk misconceptions: producing a documentary that aired on MTV, speaking at college campuses and on talk shows.

Over time, the countrys view of HIV evolved. As people started living longer, stigma decreased. People generally understood that the infection wasnt a death sentence any longer.

But there was one area people couldnt seem to understand: Pregnancy. Studies showed the general public simply didnt know or didnt believe that an HIV-positive woman, with the right treatment, had a tremendously low chance of passing the virusonto her baby less than 2-percent at the time.

Jennifer Jako got a cruel lesson in where the public stood when she appeared on the cover of Newsweek magazine, six months pregnant.

Later, as an experiment, the Kaiser Family Foundation decided to see if they could move the needle by trying something totally different: product placement of medical information in a Greys Anatomy episode.

In this episode of Only Human we tell the epic story of Jennifer Jako and how she managed to sneak into our livings rooms and, possibly, change public opinion forever.

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Only Human is a show about health that we all can relate to. Because every body has a story. Produced by WNYC Studios.

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TSA screening program risks racial profiling amid shaky science study – The Guardian

TSA screening techniques can easily give way to implicit or explicit bias, says an ACLU lawyer. Photograph: Tim Boyle/Getty Images

A new study based on thousands of internal Transportation Security Administration (TSA) documents has excoriated a controversial screening program as reliant on dubious behavioral science and amounting to surveillance of scores of unsuspecting air travelers, particularly Muslims and Latinos.

The study, conducted by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) after a years-long transparency lawsuit, may add to the anxiety of travelers in the Donald Trump era and particularly non-Americans, whom Trumps executive orders on immigration explicitly note do not enjoy legal privacy protections.

In particular, the TSA documents indicate a substantial focus on Arabs, Muslims and Latinos, despite repeated TSA assurances that the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) component does not profile travelers based on ethnicity, race or religion.

Because the techniques that the TSA are using are not grounded in valid science, those techniques raise an unacceptable risk of racial and religious profiling, said the ACLUs Hugh Handeyside, one of the attorneys in the TSA lawsuit.

The documents show the use of those techniques become a license to harass. They can easily give way to implicit or explicit bias.

The study reveals that the TSA concluded in internal investigations that its officials engaged in such profiling. At Newark Liberty international airport in New Jersey, a supervisor, ultimately demoted, instructed profiling of passengers based on race and made improper law enforcement referrals to Customs and Border Protection.

At Logan airport in Boston, agents implemented a procedure for profiling or identifying illegal aliens, something beyond the mandate of the TSA. Investigations of TSA profiling allegations also occurred at Chicago, Honolulu and Miami airports.

One behavioral-detection officer [BDO] cited in the report observed: Ive seen BDO managers lie to cover up their mistakes [and] make questionable decisions based on the way someone looks, ie cute, Asian, Black, etc Whats worse is Ive heard a BDO manager refer to passengers as towel heads when speaking in a meeting with other management AND subordinates.

TSAs program, Screening Passengers by Observation Techniques, or Spot, is intended as an additional check on potential onboard hijackings or airport attacks. Spot instructs plainclothes agents to conduct surreptitious interviews with travelers who have cleared security checkpoints and trains them to identify supposed signs of deception.

In 2013, the watchdog Government Accountability Office recommended limiting funding for Spot until TSA can provide scientifically validated evidence demonstrating that behavioral indicators can be used to identify passengers who may pose a threat to aviation security. A 2016 DHS inspector generals report stated that TSA employs 2,660 staff at 87 airports.

The passenger should not suspect that they have undergone any deliberate line of questioning, a Spot document instructs, contributing to the ACLUs conclusion that plainclothes Spot officers conduct surveillance covertly.

One TSA document on behavioral cues singles out a trancelike state; inappropriate clothing; avoiding direct contact with others.

Other alleged indicators include exaggerated yawning; excessive grooming gestures; fast eye blink rate; a lack of eye contact; excessive fidgeting, clock watching, head-turning, shuffling feet, leg shaking and more. A male with a fresh shave and lighter skin on his lower face is considered an indicator of concealed Muslim zealotry.

The ACLU lawsuit unearthed extensive scientific research undermining Spots premises that such behavior indicates deception at all.

A striking finding in the literature is that liars do not seem to show clear patterns of nervous behaviors such as gaze aversion and fidgeting, according to a 2007 article in the journal Law and Human Behavior. A 2006 review of the literature found that people who are motivated to be believed look deceptive whether or not they are lying.

Although the available science indicates that behavioral observation is little more reliable at indicating deception than flipping a coin, the ACLU found no evidence that the TSA reformed Spot to accommodate the evidence. Instead, the study called into question repeated statements the TSA has provided to Congress assuring that widely accepted principles supported by leading experts in the field of behavioral science and law enforcement underpin Spot.

[I]t appears highly unlikely that behavior detection officers could reliably assess deception or mal-intent through brief encounters with total strangers in a context as fluid and harried as an airport terminal, the ACLU study said.

In 2015, the Intercept revealed that Spot included on its list of signs you might be a terrorist activities including excessive throat clearing and contradictory instructions like gazing down and widely open staring eyes.

Handeyside said: We are just not convinced that this program can be implemented at all without raising an unacceptable risk of unlawful racial religious profiling. We think it should be discontinued.

Read more:
TSA screening program risks racial profiling amid shaky science study - The Guardian

Society For Anti-Aging, Aesthetic and Regenerative …

Heartiest Congratulations to Our Royal Patron HIS MAJESTY THE YANG DI-PERTUAN AGONG XV SULTAN MUHAMMAD V D.K., D.M.N, D.K.(Selangor), D.K.(Negeri Sembilan), D.K. (Johor), D.K.(Perak), D.K.(Perlis), D.K(Kedah), D.K.(Terengganu), S.P.M.K., S.J.M.K, S.P.K.K, S.P.S.K.

2017 WAAARNEM

Preliminary Announcement

2017 WAAARNEM

Sponsorship Prospectus and Sponsorship Booking Form

Announcing SAAARMMS new platform

The INAUGURAL WORLD CONGRESS IN ANTI-AGING, AESTHETIC, REGENERATIVE , NUTRITIONAL AND EXERCISE MEDICINE (WAAARNEM) will be held in conjunction with 14th Malaysian Conference and Exhibition & 7th International Congress and Exhibition on Anti-Aging, Aesthetic and Regenerative Medicine Dates: April 28 30, 2017 Venue: Sheraton Imperial Kuala Lumpur

Other Upcoming Events

Advanced Course in Nutritional Medicine 11-12th February, 2017 Professional Certificate in Aesthetic Medical Practice (PCAMP) Conjoint Examination conducted by SAAARMM February 12, 2017

You may email info@saaarmm.org or contact the SAAARMM Secretariat between 9.00 am and 4.00pm Mondays Fridays (Tel Nos. 03-40410092 or 03-40416336) for enquiries/programme, etc. Programme to be announced.

View our new gallery to check our past events.

SAAARMM Gallery

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Society For Anti-Aging, Aesthetic and Regenerative ...

Health briefs – BlueRidgeNow.com

TOPS hosting open house Feb. 15

Obesity is one of Americas most serious health issues.

It impacts people of all ages and can lead to many serious diseases including diabetes and heart disease.

Since 1948, TOPS (Take Off Pounds Sensibly), the countrys oldest nonprofit weight loss organization, has been there to help.

TOPS Chapter 186 in Hendersonville cordially invites the community to an open house from 9-11 a.m. Feb. 15 in the Stull Activity Hall of Grace Lutheran Church, 1245 Sixth Ave. W., Hendersonville.

Current TOPS members who have achieved and, most importantly, maintained their weight-loss goals will share their success and experience with the program.

For more information about TOPS, visit TOPS.org. For more information or questions about the open house, call Rosemary at 828-707-4883 or Barbara at 828-685-8667.

Ageless Grace sessions now offered Tuesdays

An Ageless Grace session will be held from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Tuesdays at the Henderson County Parks & Rec Athletic Activity Center, 708 S. Grove St., Hendersonville.

Each of the Ageless Grace Tools emphasizes different anti-aging techniques, including joint mobility, spinal flexibility, right-left brain coordination, bone density, kinesthetic learning, cognitive function, systemic health, balance, fall prevention, self-esteem, confidence and playfulness.

The Ageless Grace Tools include right and left-brain activities and numbered sequences of physical movements in patterns that play "games" with the mind. There are also mind-body directions that allow the brain to consciously choose and direct the movement of the body in either a random or specific sequence.

For more information, call certified instructor Suzanne Tindol at 910-308-8982 or visit agentlestretch.com.

Miller named to fellowship

Pardee Hospital vascular surgeon Dr. Craig Miller, FACS, has been named a 2017 National Library of Medicine Michael E. DeBakey Fellow in the History of Medicine. As part of his fellowship, Miller will research and write a comprehensive biography of Michael E. DeBakey.

In February 2016, the National Library of Medicine received a generous gift from The DeBakey Medical Foundation to support enhanced access to the Michael E. DeBakey Archives at the NLM and to establish the Michael E. DeBakey Fellowship in the History of Medicine.

On behalf of the entire Pardee Hospital team, I would like to congratulate Dr. Miller on this outstanding achievement, said Dr. David Ellis, FACOG, chief medical officer of Pardee Hospital. Not only is Dr. Miller a talented vascular surgeon, he is also an accomplished author and scholar. We are fortunate to have him as part of the Pardee family.

Over the course of the next year, fellows will undertake their research projects onsite in the History of Medicine Division of the Library, primarily in the Michael E. DeBakey archives which reflect the vast range of subjects from DeBakeys professional career from surgery to health care policy, medical libraries and expanding access to medical information, medical technology to medical ethics, military medicine to veteran health, humanitarianism to international diplomacy in the medical arena. The librarys DeBakey archives contain correspondence, administrative records, diaries, transcripts, publications, speeches, conference and awards material, subject files, photographs, and audiovisual media, which reflect the vast expanse of DeBakeys life, achievements, and interests as a world-renowned medical statesman, innovator, and champion of humanitarianism and life-long learning.

Miller practices at vascular surgery at Pardee and provides both diagnostic and therapeutic vascular imaging services. He performs procedures on both an inpatient and outpatient basis at Pardee Hospital, as well as in the Vascular Surgery office. Miller treats a wide variety of vascular conditions, from varicose veins to aneurysms to lower extremity arterial disease. He is a fellow of the American College of Surgeons.

Miller earned his medical degree from the Ohio State University College of Medicine. He completed an internship and residency in surgery at the Ohio State University Medical Center. He then completed a fellowship in vascular and endovascular surgery at the University of California at San Francisco and was a fellow of the university's Gastrointestinal Research Laboratory. His research has been published in numerous medical publications.

He is the author of "The Making of a Surgeon in the 21st Century," which is in its third U.S. edition and has been translated into several languages, and "The Big Z: The Life of Robert M. Zollinger, M.D.," which has been nominated for the Welch Medal, awarded to the most outstanding book on American medical history. Miller is also a Scholar-in-Residence at the Ohio State Universitys Medical Cultural Heritage Center.

Upcoming blood drives

The following blood drives will benefit the American Red Cross:

Diabetes Support Group changes location

Pardee Hospital has announced that its Diabetes Support Group will now meet at the Pardee Rehabilitation & Wellness Center, located at 212B Thompson St. in Hendersonville, adjacent to Epic Theatres. The group will meet from 10-11:30 a.m. the first and third Wednesday of each month.

The group is open to anyone who has an interest in diabetes self-management and features roundtable discussions and educational programs. For a detailed schedule of presentations, call Nina Lovern, support group facilitator, at 828-698-4533.

Local Lupus Foundation meeting today

The Lupus Foundation of America North Carolina Chapter will meet at 7 p.m. today in the CE Room of All Souls Cathedral, 9 Swan St., Asheville.

This group provides participants with an opportunity to receive introductory information about lupus, encourage the expression of concerns, provide an opportunity to share experiences, encourage and support positive coping strategies, and emphasize the importance of medical treatment. Meeting programs vary from guest speakers to DVD presentations and open group discussion.

The group meets on the second Wednesday of each month. There is no charge to attend the meeting and dropins are welcome. For more information, visit lupus.org/northcarolina.

Events at One Center Yoga

The following events will take place at One Center Yoga, located at 120 Coxe Ave., suite 3B, Asheville:

To sign up for either class, call 828-225-1904 or visit onecenteryoga.com.

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Health briefs - BlueRidgeNow.com

Jonathan Toews hoping for time to develop chemistry with linemates … – Chicago Tribune

When the Blackhawks visit the Wild on Wednesday, it appears as if Jonathan Toews will have Nick Schmaltz and Richard Panik as his linemates for the third consecutive game.

That must feel like an eternity given how often coach Joel Quenneville has churned his lines this season specifically Toews' line, on which almost every winger on the roster (and some currently in Rockford) has gotten a turn.

Toews' scoring numbers (10 goals, 20 assists) are down, in part because of an ailing back that plagued him early in the season and sidelined him for nine games in November and December.

But he also has changed linemates this season and last season, too, for that matter more than he anticipated when the Hawks traded Brandon Saad to the Blue Jackets in the 2015 offseason.

"I would never have predicted that my line would change as much as it has," Toews said. "Give credit to (Saad) he's a great player and a lot of fun to play with but you can't look at one thing like that and hang your hat on that excuse. It's up to me to find that consistency with whoever I'm playing with."

Toews is always one to put the onus on himself first and foremost, and he knows his $10.5 million salary carries with it a burden to produce. But he admitted the revolving door has made it hard to develop chemistry over multiple games the way Artem Anisimov, Patrick Kane and Artemi Panarin have blossomed together.

"As good as they've been, you don't really remember them for the game they might have been off or they didn't score," Toews said. "You give them some time to recover and they'll get back on the horse and get their offense going.

"Sometimes it is tough when you have to start that chemistry over. Sometimes it's midway through games or it's a couple times per week. Sometimes, even if I go a few games without scoring or producing, it'd be nice to start to build that chemistry and start to know where the other two guys are on your line.

"It's no knock against myself or anybody that I've been on a line with. It's about building that chemistry, being predictable for each other."

But Quenneville keeps tinkering with the lines every so often. And if general manager Stan Bowman is true to his word that the Hawks do not plan on making a big splash at the trade deadline, Toews might not have another headliner, such as Andrew Ladd a season ago, to play with come March.

"That's kind of a feel thing, and sometimes the record will dictate how long they stay together," Quenneville said. "Is it progressing where it looks like it'll come together? And it looks like it could have some staying power? With him, we always want to make sure we give it enough chance at least to survive and exist."

Toews likes his current line iteration. Schmaltz has been playing better over the last month during his second stint with the team, while Panik and Toews have formed a formidable combination in the past. Ultimately, though, Toews said it's on him to make it work.

"It's up to me to take ownership and play the best game that I can every single night and make sure that consistency is there," Toews said. "Then when it comes down to it, that's Q's decision who he thinks I should be out there with. I'll leave it at that."

chine@chicagotribune.com

Twitter @ChristopherHine

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Jonathan Toews hoping for time to develop chemistry with linemates ... - Chicago Tribune